Iron Cross Craps Strategy: Win on Every Roll Except 7

The Iron Cross is one of the most popular craps strategies because it feels like you can’t lose — you win on 30 out of 36 possible dice outcomes (83.3%). By combining Place bets on 5, 6, and 8 with a Field bet, you cover every single number except 7.

The catch? When that 7 rolls (and it will — it’s the most likely outcome at 16.67%), you lose everything on the table. The Iron Cross trades a lower win frequency for a higher loss magnitude. Here’s how it works, what it really costs, and when to use it.

How the Iron Cross Works

  1. Wait for a point to be established
  2. Place the 5 for $10 (or your chosen unit)
  3. Place the 6 for $12
  4. Place the 8 for $12
  5. Bet the Field for $10
  6. Total outlay: $44

Now every number wins except 7:

RollWhat WinsNet Result (on $44 setup)
2Field (2:1)+$10 (Field wins $20, no Place bet hit)
3Field (1:1)+$0 (Field wins $10, replaces itself)
4Field (1:1)+$0 (Field wins $10, replaces itself)
5Place 5 (7:5)+$4 (wins $14, replace $10 Field)
6Place 6 (7:6)+$4 (wins $14, replace $10 Field)
7Nothing-$44 (lose everything)
8Place 8 (7:6)+$4 (wins $14, replace $10 Field)
9Field (1:1)+$0 (Field wins $10, replaces itself)
10Field (1:1)+$0 (Field wins $10, replaces itself)
11Field (1:1)+$0 (Field wins $10, replaces itself)
12Field (2:1 or 3:1)+$10 or +$20

Key insight: Most rolls “win” but only return $0-$4 in profit (because the Field bet needs to be replaced when 5, 6, or 8 roll). You need 11+ winning rolls before a 7 to recoup your $44 outlay from a single loss.

Iron Cross House Edge

The Iron Cross has a blended house edge of approximately 3.87%. Here’s how that breaks down:

  • Place 5: 4.00% edge
  • Place 6: 1.52% edge
  • Place 8: 1.52% edge
  • Field (standard 2x on 2/12): 5.56% edge
  • Blended across the $44: approximately 3.87%

If your table pays triple on the 12 (or 2) in the Field, the Field edge drops to 2.78%, and your blended Iron Cross edge improves to about 3.1%. Always check whether your table pays 2x or 3x on Field doubles.

Iron Cross Variations

Standard Iron Cross ($44)

$10 Place 5, $12 Place 6, $12 Place 8, $10 Field. Basic setup for a $10 table.

Scaled Iron Cross ($78 / $110)

For $15 tables: $15 Place 5, $18 Place 6, $18 Place 8, $15 Field ($66 setup). For $25 tables: $25 Place 5, $30 Place 6, $30 Place 8, $25 Field ($110 setup).

Power Cross (Pressing Iron Cross)

Instead of simply collecting and replacing the Field, use hits on the 5, 6, or 8 to press those Place bets up while maintaining the Field. This creates larger payouts on subsequent hits but increases your total exposure.

Iron Cross with Regression

Start with a larger Iron Cross (e.g., $110 setup), collect 2-3 hits, then regress to the minimum ($44) and play with profit. Captures larger early wins then protects capital.

Iron Cross Strategy Tips

  1. Set a hit count — Decide in advance how many hits you’ll take before pulling bets down (e.g., 4-5 hits then take Place bets down)
  2. Don’t parlay the Field — Always replace it at the same amount. Parlaying the Field increases your risk dramatically.
  3. Watch for triple tables — If the Field pays 3x on 12, your edge improves significantly
  4. Consider an exit strategy — Once you’ve collected $44+ in profit, you’re playing with house money. Take the Place bets down and restart if you want to lock profit.
  5. Don’t chase with larger Field bets — The Field (5.56% edge) is the weakest link. Keep it consistent.

Iron Cross vs. Other Strategies

FactorIron CrossPass + Odds$66 Inside
House Edge~3.87%0.37%~2.5%
Win Frequency83.3% of rolls~49% per decision55.6% of rolls
Loss Magnitude$44 (entire setup)$10 + odds$66
Fun FactorHigh ✓Low-MediumMedium
Best ForEntertainmentOptimal playBalanced approach

Iron Cross FAQs

Is the Iron Cross a good craps strategy?

It’s a fun strategy with a moderate house edge (~3.87%), but it’s not mathematically optimal. The frequent small wins create a satisfying rhythm, but the 7 erases multiple wins in one blow. Use it for entertainment, not as a core strategy. For the lowest edge, use Pass Line + Odds or the 3 Point Molly.

How many rolls do I need to break even?

On the standard $44 setup, most winning rolls return $0-$4 in net profit. You need approximately 11 winning rolls (without a 7) to recoup one loss. Since 7 rolls once every 6 rolls on average, you’ll typically get 5-6 rolls before a 7 — which means most Iron Cross sequences end in a small loss. The strategy profits when you catch a hot roll (8+ rolls without a 7).

Why is it called the Iron Cross?

Looking at the craps table layout, the combination of Place 5 + Place 6 + Place 8 + Field forms a cross-like pattern on the betting areas. The “iron” part suggests an unbreakable defense — you’re covered on every number. (Though the 7 proves that defense isn’t actually unbreakable.)

Can I modify the Iron Cross to reduce the edge?

The biggest drag is the Field bet (5.56% edge). If you find a table that pays triple on 12, that drops to 2.78% and improves the whole system. You can also replace the Field with a Don’t Come bet for a lower edge, but this creates different dynamics (the Don’t Come can travel to one of your Place bet numbers).

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